Jose “Chille” DeCastro’s late night Sunday live stream fizzled with his audience as he received no super chats, super stickers, new memberships or trifold sales during his one-hour presentation.
DeCastro went live again from his studio in Las Vegas in an impromptu review of a recent video by the Armed Fisherman YouTube channel featuring a deposition of a police officer featuring the officer admitting that his own personal safety comes first while on the job.
Framing it as an admission that all police officers feel the same way and that the power to put officer safety first was granted to police by the “racist” Terry vs. Ohio Supreme Court ruling, DeCastro fell into familiar lines demeaning the police and police policies.
New to his observed claims, DeCastro announced that the recent overturning of his conviction for obstructing an officer and interference in a traffic stop established case law. The YouTuber expressed his belief that the ruling in his case now made it clear that obstruction is a physical act and that Las Vegas vs. DeCastro is now established case law.
DeCastro meandered a bit during the live stream, going silent and not displaying the fire that he is known for. At one point going over four minutes watching the video, offering minimal commentary to “transform” the video in compliance with YouTube restreaming guidelines.
The enthusiasm gap was also displayed by DeCastro’s audience. Despite several commercials for his Trifolds and 5A Cop Cards, no sales were verbally recorded during the live stream. DeCastro’s pitches and sales falling flat to a late-night audience made up mainly of DeCastro regulars, who already had his items for sale.
Despite mega-doner Chevy in the room, there were no observed Super Chats, Super Stickers or memberships during the live stream. DeCastro seemed to recognize the lack of enthusiasm and openly commented that “numbers were down” and that he’d be sending out “50 trifolds” from sales last week.
The half-hearted call to action made by DeCastro to his audience was to go out and film the police for the first time this week. DeCastro admitted that he had not been auditing or filming the police but would be doing so “soon.” He also offered his legal services to those who want to sue the police, promising that if members of his audience contacted him, he’d crowd source for the fees involved in the lawsuit and help sue.
Regarding his eventual campaign for the Governorship of a still unknown state, DeCastro made it clear that his platform was “totally changing the police force” and that his audience should not stop voting due to the dire political climate as he’ll need them to vote for him.
The YouTuber offered no updates on his travel plans this week, after previously giving a half-hearted statement that he may visit Garret “Press with Rancor” Van Nett in Michigan during his trial this week, nor did he promote his own or Rancor’s GoFundMe campaigns.
DeCastro is due in court this week for a motions hearing in his California Superior Court lawsuit against Kate Peter, Team Skeptic, Daniel Clement and Michael “Blue Bacon” Pierattini.
The livestream has had 3,310 views, 434 likes and 78 comments as of press time.